| diane ludin on Sat, 19 May 2001 15:41:50 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| [Nettime-bold] Diversity.com/Population.gov - Eugene Thacker |
Diversity.com/Population.gov
by Eugene Thacker [maldoror@eden.rutgers.edu]
A Tsunami of Data
When, in the early 1990s, the U.S. government-funded Human Genome
Diversity
Project (HGDP) drafted plans for a genetic database of some 4,000 to
8,000
distinct ethnic populations, it was met with a great deal of
controversy and
criticism. The stakes were raised even more when it was discovered
that the
HGDP had proposals for the patenting of the cell lines from several
members of
indigenous populations, all without those members or communities
informed
consent. Due to the interventions by such groups as the Rural
Advancement
Foundation International (RAFI), the HGDP was forced to drop three
of its
patents. In 1996 it provided a testimony to the U.S. National
Research Council
and has since drafted a document of "Model Ethical Protocols" for
research,
which emphasizes informed consent and cultural-ethical negotiation.
Since that
time, however, the HGDP has been conspicuously silent (it is now
based at
Stanford University, as the Morris Institute for Population
Studies), and, despite
the flurry of news items and press releases relating to the various
genome
mapping endeavors around the world --both government and corporate
sponsored--there has been relatively no news or updates on the
progress of the
HGDP's original plans.
Much of this curious disappearing act has to do, certainly, with the
bioethical
conundrums in which the HGDP has been involved, as well as with the
combination of vocal critics such as RAFI, and the HGDP's having
been marked
by the media and dubbed by its critics as "the vampire project."
However, while
the HGDP as an organization may have slipped from science headlines,
the
issues and problems associated with it have not. Another, parallel
development
within biotech and genetics has emerged, which has more or less
taken up the
"diversity problem" which the HGDP had dealt with in the 1990s:
bioinformatics.
Bioinformatics involves the use of computer and networking
technologies in the
organization of updated, networked, and interactive genomic
databases being
used by research institutions, the biotech industry, medical
genetics, and the
pharmaceutical industry. Bioinformatics signals an important
development in the
increasing computerization of "wet" biotech research, creating an
abstract level
where bioinformatics can form relationships between bioscientific
approaches to
diversity and the fluctuations of the biotech economy. A driving
economic force
is finance capital, bolstered from within by a wide range of "future
promises"
from biotech research (software-based gene discovery, data mining,
genetic
drugs, and so on). The emphasis we are witnessing now in "digital
capitalism,"
to use Dan Schiller's term, is an intersection of economic systems
with
information technology. As Michael Dawson and John Bellamy Foster
show, this
trend leads to an emphasis on a "total marketing strategy" that is
highly
diversified: consumer profiling, individualized marketing,
"narrowcasting,"
"push-media" and so on. Such trends are transforming biotech
research as well.
More often than not, the future of a research field within biotech
can flourish or
perish depending on the tides of stock values. In turn, those stock
values are
directly tied to the proclaimed successes or failures of clinical
trials or research
results. Most of the stock value of the biotech industry is an
example of what
Catherine Waldby calls "biovalue": either being able to produce
valuable
research results that can be transformed into products (such as
genetic-based
drugs or therapies), or the ability to take research and mobilize it
within a
product development pipeline (mostly within the domain of the
pharmaceutical
industry).
These trends are worth pointing out, because they draw our attention
to the
ways in which race, economics, and genomics are mediated by
information
technologies. Genomics--the technologically-assisted study of the
total DNA, or
genome, of organisms--currently commands a significant part of the
biotech
industry's attention. In economic as well as scientific terms,
genomics has, for
some years, promised to become the foundation upon which the
possibility of a
future medical genetics and pharmacogenomics would be based. As a
way of
providing a backdrop for Diane Ludin's project, "Harvesting the
Net," what I
would like to do here is to outline some of the linkages between
biotech as an
increasingly corporate-managed field, and the emphasis within
genomics
programs on diversification. Such research programs, which highlight
types of
"genetic difference," demonstrate the extent to which culture and
biology are
often con-fused, as well as the extent to which both ethnicity and
race are
compelled to accommodate the structures of informatics.
[continued:]
http://www.walkerart.org/gallery9/ludin/
_______________________________________________
Nettime-bold mailing list
Nettime-bold@nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold